The 1619 Project Education Network started as an informal, dispersed movement of educators seeking to better understand and better teach the history and legacies of slavery in the United States. Today the Network is an innovative national multidisciplinary community of practice consisting of more than 400 educators in 30 states who have worked to engage over 10,500 students from Pre-K to college and graduate levels with The 1619 Project.
WHO WE ARE | WHY THIS MATTERS | MEET THE TEAMS | WHERE WE'RE WORKING | TESTIMONIALS | 1619 CONFERENCE | IMPACT
The cohorts of educators that make up the Network collaborate together with award-winning journalists, historians, and our Pulitzer Center education team to create, teach, and share curricular resources that allow students to engage authentically and critically with The 1619 Project.
The 95 units Network members have created thus far compose a library of digital resources that other educators can utilize to implement The 1619 Project into their own classrooms in an effective, culturally responsive, and developmentally appropriate way. Network members help to expand the reach of these projects through their participation in dozens of events and webinars each year, sharing their experiences and expertise with thousands of teachers around the world.
MEET THE NETWORK TEAMS
reaching more than 10,500 students


BROWSE ALL IMPACT
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Pulitzer Center Update
Photography by Richard Mosse Featured in The New York Review of Books
One of Richard Mosse's unique infra-red photographs from Congo can be seen in The New York Review of...
February 22, 2012 -
Pulitzer Center Update
Photographs of Post-Quake Haiti: Andre Lambertson at The University of Virginia
Andre Lambertson presents his photographs of post-quake Haiti at the University of Virginia and...
February 20, 2012 -
Pulitzer Center Update
Mexico: Photographing Life and Death in Juarez
Pulitzer Center grantee Dominic Bracco II was interviewed by Wired about his experience documenting...
February 17, 2012 -
Pulitzer Center Update
Child Brides: Stephanie Sinclair's Photography Wins World Press Photo Award
Stephanie Sinclair wins first prize in the contemporary issues category from World Press Photo for...
February 10, 2012 -
Pulitzer Center Update
Stephen Sapienza: The Man Behind The Camera
Stephen Sapienza crafts simple but compelling narratives, chronicling the lives and plights of...
February 10, 2012 -
Pulitzer Center Update
A Week in Port-au-Prince
Two years after the earthquake the Pulitzer Center visits Haiti, along with poet Kwame Dawes, for a...
February 10, 2012
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